Joe Damato Queen Of Elephants 2 Sahara 19 -

The title you have cited appears to be a "frankentitle"—a combination of alternate titles and production codes used in the grey market of adult film distribution.


The numbering in your request ("2") is common in bootleg distributions. Distributors would often package unrelated movies together to sell them as a series.

1. The "D’Amato Touch": Joe D’Amato was known as a "one-man army" in Italian cinema. He often served as his own cinematographer (credited under his real name, Aristide Massaccesi). Queen of Elephants showcases his ability to create visually lush images. Unlike modern adult films shot on video in a sterile studio, this film has a cinematic quality, making excellent use of natural lighting and outdoor scenery. joe damato queen of elephants 2 sahara 19

2. Location Shooting: A major selling point of the film was the on-location shooting in Africa. This gave the film a legitimacy and scope that few of its contemporaries had. The landscape is as much a character as the actors, lending a "vacation vibe" to the viewing experience.

3. Music: The soundtrack is typical of early 90s Italian erotica—a mix of synth-pop and atmospheric electronic scores that feels slightly dated but nostalgically charming. The title you have cited appears to be

"Queen of Elephants 2" is rumored to relocate from the savannahs of East Africa to the sahel region—the semi-arid transition zone just south of the Sahara Desert. Elephants do not live in the Sahara itself, but the Sahel belt (spanning Chad, Niger, and Mali) is home to some of the last desert-adapted elephants. "Sahara 19" might refer to the 19th parallel north, a line of latitude that cuts through the Sahel, where Damato reportedly filmed.

Joe Damato is not a household name like David Attenborough, but within the world of independent wildlife cinematography and documentary post-production, he holds a quiet reputation. Damato has worked as a producer, editor, and technical supervisor on several nature and expedition-based projects over the past two decades. His credits include behind-the-scenes roles for mid-budget documentaries shot in Africa and Asia, often focusing on megafauna—elephants in particular. The numbering in your request ("2") is common

Unlike celebrity naturalists, Damato’s work is utilitarian: he ensures footage is shot, logged, and cut into coherent narratives. This makes him a "hidden hand" in the genre. The phrase "Queen of Elephants" likely refers to a known documentary subject—perhaps a matriarch film following a single herd, echoing titles like The Queen of Trees or Elephant Queen (a 2019 Apple TV+ nature documentary). However, Damato’s direct association with an official Elephant Queen sequel is unverified.

To understand the "sequel," we have to look at the original. Released in 1997, Queen of Elephants (Italian: La regina degli elefanti) was D’Amato’s attempt to capitalize on the mainstream success of films like The Gods Must Be Crazy and the romanticism of African adventures. It starred the striking Malù (Marilù Tolo) as a woman raised in the wild, creating a softcore adventure that was a step up in production value from D’Amato’s "one-day wonders" (films shot in a single day).

The film was a modest success in the late-night cable and VHS markets. Naturally, distributors wanted a sequel.

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